Anyone want to make bets on the source of the tomahawk cruise missile in chapter 4.22? By literary convention, I want to say the missile must be important if it earned a place in the chapter's title. It'll be interesting to see not only what the answer is (if we find out in 4.23) but to compare that to what people theorized here!

I've created this subreddit because I could not find a place devoted to discussing Symbiote other that the comments on each chapter. So, "be the change you want to see in the world" and all, I made a subreddit for it. I'm probably going to be posting links to the subreddit here and there - as often as I can get away with without feeling shameful about doing so - to insure the right people notice it.

As for ground rules, let's start off by saying that posts should have a text tag like "[4.21]" to indicate that the reader should have read up to chapter 4.21 already before reading the text in the post if they'd like to remain spoiler-free. This is a convention I've seen elsewhere, and I personally really like it. You can even use this convention to spoiler-tag posts within a less spoilery thread 4.22 to indicate that the bit of text in question requires the reader be more up to date than the thread it is in.

In fact, I'm gonna go ahead and add that one to the sidebar right away, since I can't imagine someone feeling strong objections to it as a policy, and I can use it right away to start a discussion about some aspects of the story!

This isn't a dictatorship however - If it were I'd likely find myself the only person in the subreddit forever and you can't really have a discussion with only one person. If others have ideas for good ground rules, or dislike the simple rule I proposed above, let's talk it out and figure out what we want the rules to be.

This is a subreddit intended for use in discussion, theorizing, and general banter centered around [Symbiote](http://farmerbob1.wordpress.com/2013/11/13/chapter-1-a-meeting-of-the-minds/), a web serial written by Farmerbob1. Content may be directly or tangentially related to the story, as long as it is related in some way.